Asbarez: Armenia-Introduced Genocide Prevention Measure Adopted by U.N. Human Rights Council

The United Nations Human Rights Council adopted a resolution on Thursday on the prevention of Genocide authored and introduced by Armenia.

This Resolution has been traditionally authored and initiated by Armenia. While assessing the current risks and challenges, the resolution outlines the necessary joint efforts by the UN member states to prevent the scourge of genocide, including through recognition, reparation, truth, bringing perpetrators to justice and accountability.

“The Resolution enjoys wide support, which has been demonstrated through wide co-sponsorship by States from all five UN regional groups,” said a statement from the Armenia Mission at the UN.

In its current iteration the resolution addresses issues such as conflict risk analysis and conflict prevention efforts, as well as the misuse of new technologies, in particular social media platforms, as well as the dangers of misinformation spread through them.

The resolution reaffirms the need for universal ratification of the 1948 Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.

The resolution proposes to convene an Inter-sessional meeting within the framework of the UN to mark the 75th anniversary of the Convention. The meeting will also discuss the role of social media platforms and their use by those seeking to spread hate leading to real-world discrimination and violence.

Armenian President congratulates Assyrian community on New Year

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 11:25, 1 April, 2022

YEREVAN, APRIL 1, ARMENPRESS. President Vahagn Khachaturyan addressed a congratulatory message to the Assyrian community of Armenia on the occasion of their New Year – Kha b-Nisan, the Presidential Office said.

The message reads:

“Let this beautiful holiday, which embodies the awakening of nature, be marked by constant and new achievements for Assyrians.

The friendship between Armenian and Assyrian peoples is based on close historical-cultural ties which date back to ancient times.

We have lived side by side, built and created over centuries, standing by one another at crucial moments.

Today as well the Assyrian community of Armenia is involved in different spheres of the country’s life, by keeping their national image and traditions”.

Armenian Security Council Secretary meets with Lithuanian Vice FM

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 14:38, 1 April, 2022

YEREVAN, APRIL 1, ARMENPRESS. Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan met with Lithuania’s Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs Mantas Adomenas during his visit to Lithuania.

Grigoryan and Adomenas discussed the regional security situation in the South Caucasus, according to a readout of the meeting released by the Security Council office.

Grigoryan presented the latest regional developments, as well as the Armenian side’s approaches regarding the Armenian-Azerbaijani relations, particularly the establishment of peace in the region, the process of demarcation and delimitation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and the unblocking of all economic connections.

Grigoryan and Adomenas attached importance to the course of the 2021 Armenian parliamentary election and the following democratic reforms. This all was highlighted in the context of developing bilateral relations.

Bilateral cooperation in fighting fake news was addressed. Grigoryan presented debunking evidence regarding fake news that are circulating about Armenia.

Influx of Russians in Armenia: why do they come and will they stay?


March 30 2022


  • JAMnews

How Russians who escaped to Yerevan live

According to the existing data, approximately 50,000 – 100,000 citizens of Russia have arrived in the Armenian capital in March this year. Some of them went to Georgia, some will return (or have already returned) home – but some will settle there indefinitely. Will small Armenia be able to become a second home for them?

A report by Novaya Gazeta correspondent Natalya Lavrinovich from Yerevan, which is now hosting more Russians than in the high of a tourist season.


  • Residents of South Armenia hope for tourism renaissance in the aftermath of second Karabakh war
  • Residents and eco-activists protest against mine development in north Armenia
  • Armenia’s ‘agro-revolution’ – transforming forlorn villages into tourism hotspots

Check-in for a flight to Yerevan at Mineralnye Vody airport is delayed for half an hour. Some are waiting impatiently, a Cuban couple is walking their dogs – two tiny chihuahuas, citizens of Tajikistan are squatting down. Finally, a door to the international departures hall opens.

First comes a passport control with a spectacular blonde in the window.

— Where are you flying to? How long are you going to stay in the destination country?

I’m telling the truth: “I’m flying to Armenia, and from there, I’ll probably go to Georgia. My medicines included in the Vital and Essential Drug List have disappeared from sale. I present a certificate of a disabled person, extracts from a medical institution and a prescription.

The face of the Snow Queen softens as she puts a stamp and says goodbye.

There are two more employees in the hallway on the way to the front desk. “Dollars, euros?” they ask a little conspiratorially. “Alcohol, alcohol, chickens go-a-achie”, peddlers used to walk around the stations in the mid-90s with the same intonation. Again I tell the truth: “I have some, but not much.”

The flight of Azimuth Airlines takes off almost on time, which is rather rare these days. “The flight has been rescheduled for 21.30, the flight has been canceled”, these announcements fill the lines of the Departures scoreboard of the Minvody airport.

Zvartnots International Airport

Flights to Istanbul and Yerevan are canceled and rescheduled. Turkish low-cost carrier Pegasus Airlines has curtailed its flight program to Russia until the end of April. Until April 15, all flights to the Armenian capital were canceled by Armenia air company. Cancellations were recorded with Utair. Red Wings and Azimuth are still relatively reliable.

After 50 minutes, as soon as the mountains appeared in a cloudy haze, the plane lands at the Zvartnots airport. “Facebook! Instagram! Without a VPN!” a young girl in line in front of me rejoices. “Air of freedom!”, several people say at the same time. The crowd is diverse: people with children, with pets – in conversations about relocation to Armenia and Georgia local citizens are surprised that Russians take their pets with them everywhere. Huge suitcases crawl along the baggage belt: no one knows when they will be able to return back or whether they will return at all.

Passport control takes minutes. A couple more to show a PCR test or vaccination certificate (Sputnik V is also accepted). Welcome to Armenia! Barev dzez!

“I have never seen so many bright faces on the streets, even in Moscow,” laughs Arshaluys Mghdesyan, journalist and political commentator for CivilNet channel. “It’s mostly young people, there are almost no people over 40 among them. My friend says that he lives on the outskirts of Yerevan, in Nor Aresh. He has never seen Russians in his area before, but now there are a lot of them”.

According to Arshaluys, there are no official figures on how many people moved to Armenia during these four weeks: “Some of those who arrived are Armenians: both guest workers and citizens of Russia. Some fear general mobilization, others notice the deterioration of the business environment. How to count Russians is also unclear: many of them use the country as a passage to Georgia. During the peak dates of transportation, the first two weeks of March, up to 42–43 flights were made from Russia to Armenia, which is 8,500 people a day”.

Rough estimates show that between 50,000 and 100,000 Russians arrived in the country in March. How many of them have settled in the capital remains unknown.

The second wave is expected in April.

According to Armenian realtors and hostels, before the “special operation” the occupancy of the apartment and room stock was at the level of 40% – a normal figure for this time of year. Now it is 75-80%: there are still places to live, but rented housing has already risen in price by at least 30-40%, and in many cases even more.

Arshaluys and his family rent a small two-room apartment on the border of the center and residential areas for $300. In a month, rent in the area has increased by $100 or more. “There were cases when the owner of the apartment called and told the tenants: “I am raising the price. Either you agree or I rent it out to Russians”, he says.

Contracts among tenants and landlords here are rare, because this means official taxes and an increase in the final price. They prefer to make deals verbally.

“Now we often see situations where tenants terminate their old contracts and rent out housing at new prices”, says political scientist Johnny Melikyan. “I think that by the summer everything will stabilize, there will be a balance of supply and demand. Moreover, the government has a program designed for young Armenian families, when interest on a mortgage loan can be paid using income tax. It is expected that next year it will spread to the regions, and, perhaps, people with a permanent residence permit will also be able to participate in it.

Despite this, Russians are universally treated with great sympathy, which is felt even at the everyday level.

Housing issue in Yerevan: if you are a young couple without children and animals, born in Armenia, do not smoke or drink, then welcome to Yerevan. If not, be prepared for trouble

Nurse Maria sits next to me in a funny little (yet regular) bus. Knowing where I’m from and overtaken by emotions, she hugs me. We leave together, and Maria, despite objections, pays 100 drams to the driver for me.

Tour guide Rosa serves lahmajun, a thin flatbread with minced meat, at her favorite café and refuses to take money. For Rosa, in this strange March, all business went awry: those who had been planning to come for a long time postponed their arrival indefinitely. The new residents of Yerevan have not yet come to their senses, they have no time for excursions. But there are also pleasant exceptions: someone had enough money for a one-way ticket, they will go back by bus, but the vacation was not canceled; On March 29, a large Russian group of tourists is due to fly on Aeroflot.

“Recently, we helped transport an IT company where one employee was an Azerbaijani with Russian citizenship”, Rosa says. “We were very afraid that he would be deported. But everything worked out: he was interrogated for an hour at passport control, but in the end they let him into the country”.

“I have been sitting here every day for four years”, says Artur, owner of the Old Shop antique shop on Khachatur Abovyan Street. The second floor is filled with carpets, on the first – figurines in national clothes are mixed with busts of Lenin, daggers are diluted with samovars. Previously, Arthur kept a similar shop on Rublyovka, “next to Gazmanov’s house”, but in recent years he returned to his homeland – his mother is aged, she needs help. “There are a lot of Russians. Yesterday some of yours came, bought three mahogany elephants, each figurine costs $50. If you need something, come and ask, I will always explain”.

“There are various sociological surveys that show that the Armenians generally treat the Russian population kindly, their arrival is perceived with a plus sign.

They don’t see a threat in Russia, moreover, they see it as a country that can help Armenia restore its potential after the war”, says Arshaluys Mgdesyan. – On the other hand, Russia is the guarantor of Armenia’s security on a contractual basis. This is a rather large dependence both in the economic and political aspects. There is a huge category of people working in Russia and sending money from there. In 2020, according to official figures, it was about $824 million, one-fifth of Armenia’s budget.

The impact of anti-Russian sanctions on Armenia is actively discussed by both ordinary residents of the country and local experts

“We didn’t care where we went, as long as we escaped”

“There are five times more Russians in our hotel”, says Khoren, the owner of a chamber hostel in the city center. “That is, for the summer such a figure would be normal, but not in March”.

A two-story hotel resembles Noah’s Ark: not every creature is paired here, but each guest has their own, often difficult story.

Greta, a Karabakh Armenian from Shusha, a refugee. She left her entire family 11 kilometers south of Stepanakert, but Greta herself has been living in Yerevan for more than a year, currently in a tiny four-bed female dormitory. Greta’s relatives have been left without gas for two weeks: as a result of unclear circumstances, the gas pipeline in the region collapsed. The Armenian side accused the Azerbaijani side of not allowing the repair work to be carried out.

“For two weeks, children do not go to schools and kindergartens, people do not work”, Greta explains. “They warm themselves with firewood, cook food on a fire”.

“By its actions and statements, Azerbaijan proves that it is reponsible for blowing up pipeline in Karabakh” – Pashinyan’s statement about the alleged gas pipeline explosion

This March turned extremely cold in Armenia: on 24th, Yerevan was once again covered with snow, which fell in fluffy flakes on the violets that began to bloom. A year ago at this time, the country was a peach orchard in full bloom. Greta has high hopes for the Russian peacekeeping troops stationed in Karabakh: they should take over the negotiation process. Negotiations have been going on for the fourth day, but so far without effect: over 100,000 people are still left without heating and hot water.

Amid all the worries, a friend from Moscow calls Greta on the speakerphone: “Everything is fine with us!” she shouts, constantly breaking into a cheerful mater. “And what about Putin? What is he to blame for?!”

Manicurist Greta hangs up and goes to the salon for the day. The work is very hard, but if you try hard, you can earn from $500 to $1000 a month. “You have a bad manicure in Russia,” she delivers a verdict. The woman has already filled out an application and is waiting in line to go to Abu Dhabi, where a master of her level is paid three times more.

There is Peter. Peter is originally from Kharkiv, but in recent years he lived with his mother in the Crimea. He is 21 years old, he has two passports – Russian and Ukrainian, Yerevan is a transit base for him. With the Russian passport, he left the Crimea for Mineralnye Vody, from there, also by Azimuth, he arrived in Yerevan.

Now in Yerevan you can often meet people with luggage – just from the airport

With a Ukrainian passport, the young man is going to fly to Vienna, then to Leipzig, where his grandparents live in a special care home. When something that cannot be named began, the Kharkiv old people were put in a taxi and taken first to Cherkasy (for a fee equivalent to 50,000 rubles), then by bus to the Polish border. In Poland, they were intercepted by completely unfamiliar German volunteers and transported to Leipzig.

“My grandparents live well, they have already received benefits in a two-room apartment given to them. But they complain about the lack of social circle: out of the many guests of this house, no one speaks Russian. Only volunteers with knowledge of the language sometimes help with everyday issues”.

Armenia is balancing between Russia and the West and the Ukrainian crisis has further exacerbated this situation. Experts from Armenia discuss the country’s prospects and possible strategies for development

Peter is listening to Alexei Arestovich’s speech. Sometimes he texts friends: they all left Kharkiv, most of them are safe now. At the same time, Petya’s stepbrother is participating in hostilities on the side of Ukraine, and his brother’s wife went to friends, to the north of the Kharkiv region, to the Russian border: it is not at all logical, but together it as not so scary.

Here is Oleg and Tatyana from St. Petersburg, an IT specialist and a financier. When Tatyana went outside for the first time after covid and saw a minibus with the letter Z, she felt sick.

“We didn’t care where we went, we just wanted to escape from there”, the girl says. They were not stopped by the fact that Tanya’s international passport will expire this year, and it will take Russian consulate in Armenia at least six months to make a new one.

Oleg has an open Schengen visa, they are happy to accept him in Scandinavia, but the captain of the reserve categorically refused to go to Finland or Sweden without Tatyana. And without a residence permit, she will not receive a Schengen in Armenia.

The cost of direct flights to Yerevan in early March reached 75,000-80,000 rubles one way, so the couple went through Istanbul, and from there flew to the capital of Armenia.

They have been in this hostel for almost two weeks and one of these days they are moving into a rented apartment. They rented a Euro-room apartment 15 minutes from the center for six months for $600 a month. Both are optimistic about the prospects of finding a job here: the IT sector is being relocated to Armenia by entire labor collectives.

“Our friends in Moscow were told: whoever does not want to move should leave of their own free will. Everyone wanted to leave”. And although Yandex denied the message about moving the headquarters to Yerevan, the number of company employees who arrived in the country in recent weeks has reached a hundred, and a search for coworking is underway for them.

The couple has already realized that local IT representatives were wary of the prospect of increased competition. The same will soon apply to other professions. “But on the other hand, the formation of a new diaspora will lead to the fact that Russians – baristas, barbers, nannies, journalists, gallery owners, etc. — will work for themselves”, says Tatyana. She herself intends to look for a job as a financier.

On the street in Yerevan

“Without knowledge of the language, it is quite difficult to find a job in state institutions, there are other segments where knowledge of Armenian is mandatory. But great importance is attached to IT, tourism, export, knowledge of Russian and English is encouraged. The IT sector is developed here. They say that those who are used to advertising and advertising go to Georgia, this direction is developed there.

Information technology is quite developed in Armenia, there are a lot of vacancies, professionals, regardless of whether they know Russian, English or Burundian, are in great demand. And their average salary starts at $3,000”, says Arshaluys Mgdesyan. “I think a good specialist will find a Jobe everywhere. There is a great shortage of qualified personnel in Armenia, ranging from locksmiths and plumbers to warehouse managers, furniture makers, representatives of the service sector, etc”.

Several Russian colleagues came to see his friend, a very famous professor at New York University. They live in the same apartment “until better times.” In Armenian social networks, the community offers to do everything to keep the professorship here – this is a great incentive and a chance for the students of the country.

The post-revolutionary country plans to rely on the information technology industry, and intends to use its potential to gain a foothold on the international market

“We are all in the Eurasian Union, and the idea of its creation was based on four freedoms, one of which is the freedom of movement of labor”, says Johnny Melikyan. “For many years after the creation of the Eurasian Union, it acted in one direction: Armenian citizens went to Russia to work. Now it turns out that there is still a return flow, there are people who come here in the hope of finding a job.

Competitive specialists will probably be able to get a job here, especially people with experience in such head offices in Moscow as Ernst & Young and the like. But there will probably be dozens of them, no more. The rest may have problems: our market is still small, knowledge of the state language is important in many places. But the sphere of tourism, service, etc. will live, will be engaged in compatriots. For example, the Iranians succeed in this, they open firms, translation offices, law offices that serve mainly their citizens.

Those who cannot afford an apartment at the new Yerevan prices are advised to join co-living or consider other cities in the country. What is rented in the capital for 200,000 tdrams (or $400), in Gyumri, located 100 kilometers from Yerevan, can be rented for half the amount, and in Vanadzor for $150.

A rally in support of Russia in Yerevan, which has gone largerly unnoticed in Armenia, has sparked outrage and debates outside the country

“Dear citizens of the Russian Federation and the Republic of Ukraine, who arrived in the Dilijan community, we inform you that the Dilijan City Hall expresses its readiness to assist in solving priority tasks, such as providing information, finding housing, informing about vacancies, document management , ensuring that children attend preschool institutions, business support, as well as prompt response to any problems. We inform you that every Thursday, starting at 10.00 am, is the day of the reception with the mayor of Dilijan, who you can contact in case of any problems”, the city administration announced on March 18.

Moving to Armenia theoretically has many advantages.

The order of prices here is comparable to the Russian one. For the time being, the first settlers, who shop together in SAS and Yerevan City, analogues of the expensive Moscow Azbuka Vkusa, did not appreciate the advantages of markets and small private shops, but experience is something that can be acquired.

For Russians in Armenia, there is a simplified process of obtaining a residence permit. Registration of an individual entrepreneur, that is, your own business, takes a day (a week – in the most difficult case).

It is easy to open an account and get a multi-currency card here, and Mir cards are accepted everywhere.

Armenians almost everywhere speak good Russian, signs in the metro are duplicated in Russian, many houses have an address written in Cyrillic.

There are several schools in the city that work entirely according to Russian programs, there are separate classes, there are private Russian-speaking educational institutions, even in “ordinary” Armenian schools, Russian lessons are obligatory from the 2nd grade. True, these classes are overcrowded, and the number of students can reach up to 30. But demand creates supply, new ones will open.

What will happen in practice – the future will show.

30,000 specialists will be needed in the IT field in Armenia by 2025

Now even an ordinary walk through the streets of the capital turns into a nostalgic journey: in the park in front of the opera house, a man in a cellophane “house”, hiding from rain and snow, plays the keys “Beautiful is far away”.

But will staying in the country be safe for those who face persecution in their home country? Or can membership in the CSTO be a reason for repeating the Belarusian scenario, when Russian activists who have been noted in the protests in Belarus are detained and sent to serve criminal terms in Zhodino, Vitebsk and Baranovichi?

“My Russian colleagues asked me about this, but I don’t think it will come to that”, comments Arshaluys Mgdesyan. “Well, what did the relocants do? A couple of statements, they wrote something on social networks. Among these people, perhaps 10 percent are political activists, others have moved for various reasons.

I do not think that Armenia will become an island of the Russian liberal opposition, a second London. But the situation is very, very uncertain. It all depends on how quickly it all ends, how long the sanctions against Russia will be. If something changes in a month or two, concessions will begin, of course, many will go back. It’s rational, it’s normal”.

A popular place in the center of Yerevan (near the monument to M. Saryan), artists sell their paintings and play chess, waiting for buyers

Moon Knight Gets Review-Bombed for Acknowledging Armenian Genocide

CBR.com
April 2 2022

The first episode of Disney+’s Moon Knight is getting review bombed owing to a historical reference made by antagonist Arthur Harrow.

Disney+’s Moon Knight series, which only recently saw the release of its premiere episode, has been the subject of review-bombing on IMDb, owing to the fact that the show acknowledged a historical event that the nation of Turkey has consistently denied: the Armenian genocide.

Alongside seemingly legitimate one-star reviews on the site, several viewers have criticized the mention of the Armenian genocide, insisting that no such event took place and that the show is serving as propaganda– some going so far as to call the show “racist.” Similar comments and one-star reviews have appeared on review aggregate Rotten Tomatoes, though the vast majority of audiences have provided a positive review of the show.

RELATED:Moon Knight’s Oscar Isaac Says Steven Grant Is On The Autism Spectrum

The scene in question featured a confrontation between Arthur Harrow and Steven Grant at the museum he works at. Harrow tells Grant of the Egyptian god Ammit, who was able to judge a life in its entirety– for crimes a person had yet to commit. In his speech, Harrow claims that if Ammit had not been betrayed by gods and avatars, she could have prevented horrors such as Hitler, the Armenian genocide, Pol Pot and more.

The Turkish government’s official stance is that the Armenian genocide, which took place during World War I between 1915 and 1917, is largely fabricated. It should be noted that the genocide, which was committed by the Ottoman Empire (now the Republic of Turkey), was well-documented. Mentions of the genocide are censored in Turkey and several countries have refused to acknowledge it in the past in order to maintain a positive relationship with the country.

RELATED:Moon Knight’s First Episode Has Few Nods To The MCU – And That’s For The Best

It is understood that during WWI, the Ottoman Empire saw between 800,000 to 1.2 million Armenian people sent into the Syrian Desert, where they were placed into concentration camps and subjected to torture and abuse and killed. Furthermore, approximately 200,000 Christian Armenians were forcibly converted to Islam and brought into Muslim households for integration.

While the Turkish government does not outright deny the historical event, it does deny that a genocide took place, stating only that the Ottoman Empire committed atrocities. It is often mentioned that Polish-Jewish lawyer Raphael Lemkin, who coined the term “genocide” and initiated the Genocide Convention of 1948, was prompted to do so after because of the Armenian genocide and the absence of international laws at the time that could be used to prosecute those behind the tragedy. There are currently 31 countries, including the United States, that officially recognize the Armenian genocide.

New episodes of Moon Knight air every Wednesday on Disney+.

https://www.cbr.com/moon-knight-pilot-review-bombed/
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Azerbaijan destroying the Armenian cultural heritage in Parukh and Karaglukh

Public Radio of Armenia
April 2 2022

Azerbaijan is destroying the Armenian cultural heritage in Parukh and Karaglukh and resorting to open falsifications, Artsakh’s Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sport said in a statement.

Below is the statement in full:

On March 24, 2022, as a result of Azerbaijani aggression, the area around the village of Parukh in the Askeran region of the Artsakh Republic, the former settlement of Karaglukh and the homonymous height, were occupied by the enemy, and the Azerbaijani Armed Forces immediately proceeded to the well-known script of the destruction of the Armenian historical and cultural heritage in the occupied territory.

Apart from its strategic importance, the area is also important for its unique historical-cultural and historical-natural environment. According to the government list of immovable monuments of culture and history, about 20 monuments are officially registered in the above-mentioned territories, including 2 churches (one of them is the 13th century Holy Mother of God church), the famous Shikakar-Karaglukh fortress, cultural monuments of archeological value, cemeteries, khachkars, tombstones. The Shikakar cave is also located in here, where a research was conducted by the Azokh international archaeological expedition in 2011.

However, the area has not yet been sufficiently studied, which is also confirmed by the research conducted in the area in December 2021, as a result of which thirty more monuments were discovered.

Considering the bitter experience of Azerbaijan’s anti-Armenian hatred policy, when that country organizes and encourages cultural vandalism in the occupied territories of Artsakh at the highest level, we can confidently declare that the historical and cultural heritage of Parukh and Karaglukh is also endangered under the Azerbaijani occupation.

Our concerns become more substantive after watching the video released by the Azerbaijani media outlet AZTV on March 30, 2022, which demonstrates human remains exhumed by Azerbaijanis. The Azerbaijani propaganda machine, resorting to a deceitful and insidious method, presents this fact as if a mass burial of Azerbaijanis in the village of Ivanyan (Azerbaijani Khojaly), as a result of hostilities of 1992. However, the reality is completely different. In particular:

1. Although the Azerbaijani side has long resorted to falsification, accusing the Armenian side of the massacre of Azerbaijanis in the village of Ivanyan, there is irrefutable evidence that the Artsakh Armed Forces provided a humanitarian corridor to the civilian population before and during the hostilities, and this massacre took place by the militants of the Azerbaijani opposition in the outskirts of Akna (Azerbaijani Aghdam) which is under their control. They intended to use the massacre in Azerbaijan as a basis for coup d’état, which was acknowledged even by the then President Ayaz Mutalibov. More detailed evidence can be found at the following link:

2. Based on the analysis of sufficient factual, geographical, and cultural data we have, it become clear that the above-mentioned footage is filmed at the Armenian cemetery of Parukh called “Kalen Khut”, which dates back to the 9th-12th centuries (map attached). Therefore, the bones presented are the sceletal remains from an old Armenian cemetery.

A) Experts familiar with the are and the residents of Parukh claim that the video was shot at the “Kalen Khut” cemetery.

B ) One glance of culturologists and archaeologists is enough to fix that the human skulls presented in the video have an brachycephalic (round-headed) structure of armenoid anthropological type typical of Armenians, while the population of Azerbaijan have dolichocephalic (long-headed) structure of Caspian anthropological type skull (photos attached).

C) All the presented bones have smooth surface, which in an archeological sense means that they are not 30 years old, but centuries old, while the nomadic ancestors of the Azerbaijani population invaded these parts of Artsakh only in the 18-19 centuries.

3. Moreover, the Azerbaijani propaganda machine uses such an unfounded and false argument that it can also be sargued that the village of Ivanyan (Azerbaijani: Khojaly) is at least 17 kilometers away from Parukh (map attached). It is clear that the hostilities in Ivanyan could not have anything to do with Parukh.

The above-mentioned facts are so eloquent that we have to record once again not only another episode of the destruction of the Armenian cultural heritage on the Azerbaijani part, but also the anti-Armenian falsification and attempt to deceive its own people and the international community.

Therefore, taking into account the systematic and deliberate crimes committed by Azerbaijan against the rich Armenian and Christian cultural heritage in the previous decades, which gained new momentum since 2020 hostilities and have been registered by many international organizations, including the resolution adopted by the European Parliament on March 9, 2022, we call on the international community, human rights organizations and organizations for the protection of cultural heritage not to show indifference and to take measures against the cultural ethnocide committed by Azerbaijan. We regret that to date UNESCO, despite its commitments and mission, has not sent a fact-finding mission to the occupied territories of Artsakh, and does not exert significant efforts to prevent the commission of new crimes by Azerbaijan.

“Days of Crimea” to be held in Armenia

MediaMax, Armenia
April 2 2022

Yerevan /Mediamax/. “Days of Crimea” will be launched in Armenia on April 4.

TASS says this was reported by the Vice Prime Minister of Crimea Georgi Muradov.

“In the coming days we will hold Days of Crimea in Armenia. They are waiting for us there, the public is interested in everything that happens in Crimea. There will be meetings of the Crimean and Armenian businesses, meetings with the public, speeches, conferences, performances by our creative teams. These are full-fledged events,” Muradov said.

Mediamax reports that the organizer of the event is the chairman of the Union of Constitutional Law, head of the Friends of Crimea club Hayk Babukhanyan.

Gas supply to Goris, Kapan and Artsakh temporarily cut off due to accident

Panorama
Armenia – April 2 2022

Gas supply to some settlements in Armenia’s southern Syunik Province as well as Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) has been temporarily cut off due to an accident.

In an official statement, the Gazprom Armenia CJSC said the Goris-Kapan-Kajaran gas pipeline was damaged in the 13.5 km section during road construction work on Saturday.

The gas delivery to the towns of Goris and Kapan and the nearby villages as well as the Artsakh Republic has been suspended starting from 11:10am to repair the damage.

“The timeframe for the completion of the maintenance work will be reported additionally,” the gas distribution company said.

Analyst: Armenians dissatisfied with current situation should make their voices clearly heard

Panorama
Armenia – April 2 2022

The people dissatisfied with the current situation in Armenia should make their voices clearly heard at an upcoming opposition rally in Yerevan, according to political analyst Hrant Melik-Shahnazaryan, head of the Voskanapat Analytical Center.

The Armenian opposition announced its intention to hold a rally in Yerevan’s Liberty Square on 5 April to address issues concerning the security of Armenia and Artsakh.

“The April 5 rally is organized by the parliamentary opposition. At first I thought it was the initiative of the ARF only. But this is much better,” he wrote on Telegram on Friday.

“Actually, it doesn’t matter whose idea it was. The most important thing is that the voice of society be heard now. People must come to the square and make it clear that they do not need an agenda for peace, but the one for restoration and sustainable development. And peace can only be the result of all this,” the analyst noted.

“Let us speak frankly: we, Armenians, are not only misunderstood in the world, but have also begun to be disrespected. Many of my foreign colleagues ask me a specific question, “In Artsakh, Azerbaijan has taken control over a new village and important positions, why doesn’t anyone in Yerevan stand up against it? What is the answer to that question? To say that we have put up with it? But it is not the case, is it?

“I do not know what kind of speeches and demands will be made at the rally. I do not know what developments will follow them. But I can say for sure that the voices of the people dissatisfied with the current situation should be clearly heard. Believe me, it is much more important now than even all the decisions the current capitulant authorities may take,” Melik-Shahnazaryan said.

Armenian Church commemorates St. Gregory the Illuminator’s torments, commitment to pit

Panorama
Armenia – April 2 2022

The Armenian Apostolic Church commemorates St. Gregory the Illuminator’s torments and commitment to the pit on Saturday, Qahana.am reports.

The feast is the first one among the three commemoration days dedicated to the memory of St. Gregory the Illuminator, the first Catholicos of All Armenians. According to the Armenian Church Calendar, it is celebrated on the eve of the Fifth Sunday during the period of Great Lent. The feast is dedicated to the torments which St. Gregory suffered during his imprisonment.

According to historical sources, St. Gregory the Illuminator was the son of Anak Partev, a knight and nobleman, who killed the Armenian King Khosrov Arshakouni. In retaliation, Anak is executed by the Armenians. His son, Gregory, lived and studied in Caesarea, and was brought up as a pious Christian. Gregory returns to Armenia as an adult and becomes a member of the royal court. King Tiridates (Trdat), the son of King Khosrov and heir to the throne, appoints Gregory as the Chancellor of the Armenian Kingdom. Tiridates, learning that Gregory is a Christian and the son of Anak, subjects him to severe tortures and commits Gregory to death, by imprisoning him in a deep underground pit.

In 301 A.D., after spending 13 years in the pit, St. Gregory the Illuminator is freed from the dungeon and emerges to spread the Light of Christ in Armenia. He thus becomes the first pontiff of the Armenian Church, baptizes the royal family, and evangelizes the whole of the Armenian Nation. Armenia becomes the first nation in the world to officially proclaim Christianity as her state religion.

St. Gregory the Illuminator is recognized by all of Christendom as a Saint, and he is commemorated in all traditional Christian churches.